Okay, so I want to get my chicks... in April I should have my pen by then.... 
 
 
 
My son in law wants 'different colored eggs'  I'm like oh my stars
   I just want plain friendly chickens to lay nice eggs.
 
So what can I put together to make us both 'happy'?
		 
		
	 
 
 
	
		
	
	
		
		
			okay, well he only WANTS ONE CHICKEN.................... can I get ONE bantam with another breed? will they get along?????
		
		
	 
 
Are you buying from the local farm store?  If so, you can look for
 
White Eggs:  White Leghorns
Green Eggs:  Easter Eggers (also sometimes labeled Ameraucana/Araucana)  (some will say blue eggs and pink eggs, but usually you get green)
Medium Brown Eggs:  New Hampshires (better chance of being friendlier than Rhode Island Reds which also lay a medium brown)
Other Brown Layers that are usually friendly:  Red Comets, Red Stars, Red Sexlinks, Black Sexlinks, Buff Orpingtons, White Rocks, White Orpingtons, Speckled Sussex, and others
Dark Brown Eggs:  not usually available at the local farm store
 
If ordering from a hatchery like Ideal Poultry, you might be able to get a different type of white egg layer, although many hatcheries are running low on rare breeds at this time of year.  They still have White Leghorns, though.
 
If ordering from a hatchery, you might still be able to get some dark brown egg layers, like Welsummers, but they are probably out for the season.  Marans also usually lay a dark brown egg, but hatcheries are usually out of them for the season.
 
I haven't had a great number of bantams, but they have always done just fine in a flock of standard-sized layers.  They were raised with the other layers from the time they were chicks.  My bantams have never laid well ... it's more of a sporadic thing with them ... and not through the winter.  This spring is the best my little d'Uccle has ever laid.  She's been laying for about 3 weeks now and is going to be 5 years old in a month or two!!
 
I've noticed that the White Leghorn will lay an extra large egg to a medium egg depending on what specific hybrid a hatchery gets from their supplier.  If you go to the Shaver/Babcock/ISA web sites, you'll see (with a little hunting) that they have hybrids that specifically lay an extra large egg and some that specifically lay a large or medium egg.  I have had extra large White Leghorns from one hatchery and med/large egg laying White Leghorns from another hatchery.  And there was no way I could have known what I was getting beforehand.